Flights of Fancy

Don Featherstone, the inventor of the plastic flamingo, once said he “brought poor taste to the poor people.” Before his Pepto-pink plastic creations popped up like weeds in low-rent lawns, only the rich, who exhibited expensive sculptures on their estates, could afford lawn ornaments, Featherstone said.

Poor taste and poor people aren’t usually associated with Palm Beach County, but Featherstone’s flamingos winged their way into our hearts – and our art.

Plastic flamingos “are the central icon of suburban kitsch,” she says. “They fascinated me: here’s this piece of kitschy lowbrow art that anyone can understand. What happens when you mix elements of highbrow taste with lowbrow drama?”

Knouse’s inspiration was a job after college in Bucks County, Penn., which, she says, has acres of American-Dream-suburban-tract houses. “I worked as a lead faux-finish painter for an interior design company. I made plain walls look like marble, turned cheap wainscoting into aged wood. This suburban culture was crying out for history and romance.”

Knouse created the mixed-media work and its many editions from 2010 to 2013. The sculpture has been exhibited nationwide.

Lake Worth photographer Jacek Gancarz shares Knouse’s fascination with plastic flamingos. “After attending Art Basel Miami Beach,” he says, “the idea popped in my head: What better place than a contemporary art fair to grab interesting-looking people and hand them a kitsch icon to pose with?” As if finding the right place was the only thing that had been holding him back.

“Most people were curious and enthusiastic. Some needed convincing. Others shared personal stories about the icon. A few literally turned up their noses. I figured they lacked a sense of humor.”

Gancarz didn’t pose his subjects. “I tried to elicit an emotion – and feed my playful curiosity. Some participants personified the object and some exhibited behaviors of maternal instincts and even predation. Others simply treated it as an inanimate prop, creatively posing with it to distinguish themselves. You can’t deny the appeal of the whimsical factor.”

Then there’s Mother Nature’s work of art – the American flamingo.

The flamingos at the Palm Beach Zoo & Conservation Society in West Palm Beach are ready for their close-up now thanks to a little nip and tuck. “Two sides of the boardwalk in the zoo’s flamingo habitat were replaced and we’ve added a nice bench where you can sit and watch them,” says Claudia Harden, the zoo’s marketing manager. The changes – which the zoo is proud to report were made with environmentally friendly materials – allow visitors to get closer to the colorful birds. This winter, when the section of the zoo dedicated to Florida wildlife gets a redo, the flamingo habitat will get a full facelift.

Also looking good are the wild flamingos that returned to southwest Palm Beach County after a century-long absence, says Susan McKemy of the Audubon Society of the Everglades.

Naturally, these Palm Beach County flamingos reside in an exclusive residence with restricted access: South Florida Water Management District Stormwater Treatment Area 2. The Audubon Society conducts guided carpool birding tours to the remote location.

The ASE “has received 1,200 requests from the Netherlands, Germany, Portugal and Canada, as well 21 states,” McKemy reports, verifying the international – if not universal – appeal of the pink birds. More than 620 people ventured into the western reaches of the county on 13 trips the organization led between March 7 and May 2 of this year alone. Some birders were disappointed. In April, however, a pair of flamingos was caught in the throes of passion, possibly the “first time flamingos have been observed and documented mating in the wild in Florida,” according to McKemy.

Those frisky Palm Beach County flamingos may have racy backgrounds.

No one knows why the flamingos returned, McKemy says. “Many scientists believe they are wild, yet others believe they are escapees from the Hialeah racetrack in Miami.”

Jacek Gancarz’s pink flamingo photo series was exhibited at Whitespace: The Mordes Collection in West Palm Beach as “The Last Pink Flamingo” and can be seen by searching the wilds of Facebook for “The Last Pink Flamingo Project.”

The South Florida Water Management District has contracted with the Audubon Society of the Everglades to conduct birding tours into Stormwater Treatment Area 2, a restricted area. ASE offers monthly guided carpool birding tours into the area from October through April, with more tours in March and April, the mostly likely time to see the American flamingos. ASE cannot guarantee that flamingos will be seen. For more information: AudubonEverglades.org.

See the flamingos at the Palm Beach Zoo & Conservation Society in West Palm Beach strut their stuff 363 days out of the year (364 in every leap year). During the Flamingo Keeper Talks, offered daily at 10 a.m., those who keep the birds in the pink share fascinating facts about their feathered friends and feed them. For more information: PalmBeachZoo.org.